566 research outputs found
A systematic study of Lyman-Alpha transfer through outflowing shells: Model parameter estimation
Outflows promote the escape of Lyman- (Ly) photons from dusty
interstellar media. The process of radiative transfer through interstellar
outflows is often modelled by a spherically symmetric, geometrically thin shell
of gas that scatters photons emitted by a central Ly source. Despite
its simplified geometry, this `shell model' has been surprisingly successful at
reproducing observed Ly line shapes. In this paper we perform automated
line fitting on a set of noisy simulated shell model spectra, in order to
determine whether degeneracies exist between the different shell model
parameters. While there are some significant degeneracies, we find that most
parameters are accurately recovered, especially the HI column density () and outflow velocity (). This work represents an important
first step in determining how the shell model parameters relate to the actual
physical properties of Ly sources. To aid further exploration of the
parameter space, we have made our simulated model spectra available through an
interactive online tool.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures. Matches version published in ApJ. Our grid of
Lyman alpha spectra can be accessed at http://bit.ly/man-alpha through an
interactive online too
Spatial curvature endgame: Reaching the limit of curvature determination
Current constraints on spatial curvature show that it is dynamically
negligible: (95% CL). Neglecting
it as a cosmological parameter would be premature however, as more stringent
constraints on at around the level would offer
valuable tests of eternal inflation models and probe novel large-scale
structure phenomena. This precision also represents the "curvature floor",
beyond which constraints cannot be meaningfully improved due to the cosmic
variance of horizon-scale perturbations. In this paper, we discuss what future
experiments will need to do in order to measure spatial curvature to this
maximum accuracy. Our conservative forecasts show that the curvature floor is
unreachable - by an order of magnitude - even with Stage IV experiments, unless
strong assumptions are made about dark energy evolution and the CDM
parameter values. We also discuss some of the novel problems that arise when
attempting to constrain a global cosmological parameter like
with such high precision. Measuring curvature down to this level would be an
important validation of systematics characterisation in high-precision
cosmological analyses.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figure. Updated to match version published in Phys. Rev.
Reconstructing cosmic growth with kSZ observations in the era of Stage IV experiments
Future ground-based CMB experiments will generate competitive large-scale
structure datasets by precisely characterizing CMB secondary anisotropies over
a large fraction of the sky. We describe a method for constraining the growth
rate of structure to sub-1% precision out to , using a combination
of galaxy cluster peculiar velocities measured using the kinetic
Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (kSZ) effect, and the velocity field reconstructed from
galaxy redshift surveys. We consider only thermal SZ-selected cluster samples,
which will consist of sources for Stage 3 and 4 CMB
experiments respectively. Three different methods for separating the kSZ effect
from the primary CMB are compared, including a novel blind "constrained
realization" method that improves signal-to-noise by a factor of over
a commonly-used aperture photometry technique. Measurements of the integrated
tSZ -parameter are used to break the kSZ velocity-optical depth degeneracy,
and the effects of including CMB polarization and SZ profile uncertainties are
also considered. A combination of future Stage 4 experiments should be able to
measure the product of the growth and expansion rates, , to
better than 1% in bins of out to -- competitive
with contemporary redshift-space distortion constraints from galaxy surveys.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figure
Statistical recovery of the BAO scale from multipoles of the beam-convolved 21cm correlation function
Despite being designed as an interferometer, the MeerKAT radio array (an SKA
pathfinder) can also be used in autocorrelation (`single-dish') mode, where
each dish scans the sky independently. Operating in this mode allows extremely
high survey speeds to be achieved, albeit at significantly lower angular
resolution. We investigate the recovery of the baryon acoustic oscillation
(BAO) scale from multipoles of the redshift-space correlation function as
measured by a low angular resolution 21cm intensity mapping survey of this
kind. Our approach is to construct an analytic model of the multipoles of the
correlation function and their covariance matrix that includes foreground
contamination and beam resolution effects, which we then use to generate an
ensemble of mock data vectors from which we attempt to recover the BAO scale.
In line with previous studies, we find that recovery of the transverse BAO
scale is hampered by the strong smoothing effect of the
instrumental beam with increasing redshift, while the radial scale
is much more robust. The multipole formalism naturally
incorporates transverse information when it is available however, and so there
is no need to perform a radial-only analysis. In particular, the quadrupole of
the correlation function preserves a distinctive BAO `bump' feature even for
large smoothing scales. We also investigate the robustness of BAO scale
recovery to beam model accuracy, severity of the foreground removal cuts, and
accuracy of the covariance matrix model, finding in all cases that the radial
BAO scale can be recovered in an accurate, unbiased manner.Comment: Updated to MNRAS accepted version. 20 pages, 14 figures. For the busy
reader: see Figs. 4, 5, and
Quintessence in a quandary: prior dependence in dark energy models
The archetypal theory of dark energy is quintessence: a minimally coupled
scalar field with a canonical kinetic energy and potential. By studying random
potentials we show that quintessence imposes a restricted set of priors on the
equation of state of dark energy. Focusing on the commonly-used
parametrisation, , we show that there is a natural
scale and direction in the plane that distinguishes quintessence
as a general framework. We calculate the expected information gain for a given
survey and show that, because of the non-trivial prior information, it is a
function of more than just the figure of merit. This allows us to make a
quantitative case for novel survey strategies. We show that the scale of the
prior sets target observational requirements for gaining significant
information. This corresponds to a figure of merit FOM, a
requirement that future galaxy redshift surveys will meet.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. For the busy reader, Fig. 1 is the money plot.
v2: Minor changes, matches published version. Code open source at
gitorious.org/random-quintessenc
Cross correlation surveys with the Square Kilometre Array
By the time that the first phase of the Square Kilometre Array is deployed it
will be able to perform state of the art Large Scale Structure (LSS) as well as
Weak Gravitational Lensing (WGL) measurements of the distribution of matter in
the Universe. In this chapter we concentrate on the synergies that result from
cross-correlating these different SKA data products as well as external
correlation with the weak lensing measurements available from CMB missions. We
show that the Dark Energy figures of merit obtained individually from WGL/LSS
measurements and their independent combination is significantly increased when
their full cross-correlations are taken into account. This is due to the
increased knowledge of galaxy bias as a function of redshift as well as the
extra information from the different cosmological dependences of the
cross-correlations. We show that the cross-correlation between a spectroscopic
LSS sample and a weak lensing sample with photometric redshifts can calibrate
these same photometric redshifts, and their scatter, to high accuracy by
modelling them as nuisance parameters and fitting them simultaneously
cosmology. Finally we show that Modified Gravity parameters are greatly
constrained by this cross-correlations because weak lensing and redshift space
distortions (from the LSS survey) break strong degeneracies in common
parameterisations of modified gravity.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures. This article is part of the 'Cosmology Chapter,
Advancing Astrophysics with the SKA (AASKA14) Conference, Giardini Naxos
(Italy), June 9th-13th 2014
Weak gravitational lensing with CO galaxies
Optical weak lensing surveys have become a powerful tool for precision
cosmology, but remain subject to systematic effects that can severely bias
cosmological parameter estimates if not carefully removed. We discuss the
possibility of performing complementary weak lensing surveys at radio/microwave
frequencies, using detections of CO-emitting galaxies with resolved continuum
images from ngVLA. This method has completely different systematic
uncertainties to optical weak lensing shear measurements (e.g. in terms of
blending, PSF, and redshift uncertainties), and can provide additional
information to help disentangle intrinsic alignments from the cosmological
shear signal. A combined analysis of optical and CO galaxy lensing surveys
would therefore provide an extremely stringent validation of highly-sensitive
future surveys with Euclid, LSST, and WFIRST, definitively rejecting biases due
to residual systematic effects. A lensing survey on ngVLA would also provide
valuable spectral (kinematic) and polarimetric information, which can be used
to develop novel cosmological analyses that are not currently possible in the
optical.Comment: Contribution to 2018, ASP Conference Series Monograph 7, "Science
with a Next-Generation Very Large Array," Eric Murphy, ed., in preparatio
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